A tale of two star-crossed lovers who hit it off in their thirties. A mother tragically killed in a car crash. The burden of having to live up to parental expectation and take on the family business.
These are not – spoiler alert – themes from Harry and Meghan’s recent tell-all Netflix documentary, but plot points from Meet Me at the Lake, the saccharine romance novel that the Sussexes recently opted to adapt for the screen, as part of their production deal with the streamer.
The rumoured $3m deal is the latest big entertainment industry play for the couple, who could do with another hit. Harry’s autobiography Spare broke UK first-day sales records when it was released back in January, but aside from that, the aspiring multimedia moguls have floundered slightly. Plans for their first animated series, Pearl, which would have told the story of a young girl travelling through history to meet inspirational women, were scrapped last year. The biggest blow has been the end of their rumoured $20m podcast deal with Spotify; the partnership resulted in just one show, Archetypes, Meghan’s girl boss-inflected exploration of female stereotypes.
The decision to split with the audio company was mutual, but the fact that one of Spotify’s top executives, Bill Simmons, later publicly branded the Sussexes as “grifters” surely had to hurt. “They know all eyes will be on what they do [next],” says celebrity manager and PR expert Mayah Riaz – and crucially, after sharing a lifetime’s worth of Windsor goss in both Spare and their docu-series, the pair need “a way to show the public that they can do projects which are not about [the royals] and still get accolades”.
This story is from the August 12, 2023 edition of The Independent.
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This story is from the August 12, 2023 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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